Surprise surprise, Corp Comm messages to APS are gone

So a state regulator is regularly texting a utility executive, a pair of utility-friendly candidates and the head of a dark-money group that campaigned for those candidates. He then routinely deletes the text messages, despite the fact that such communications are public record.

And when questions arise about the content of those messages, we are told he's thrown away his cell phone.

Convenient, isn't it?

If you're not following the saga of the Arizona Corporation Commission and its rather cozy relationship with Arizona Public Service, then don't be surprised to wake up one day to see that your electric bill has shot up like a Phoenix thermometer on a June afternoon.

According to the logs, Stump was madly texting Forese and Little during the run-up to last year's election, along with an APS executive and the head of the Arizona Free Enterprise Club, which spent nearly $450,000 on an independent dark-money campaign aimed at getting the pair elected to the commission that regulates utilities. APS is widely believed to have supplied funding to the Free Enterprise Club and a second dark-money group in order to secure the election of Forese and Little.

In all, the logs show Stump sent 56 emails to Barbara Lockwood, an APS executive, between June and September and 46 to Mussi. He sent about 180 to Forese and Little, who enjoyed $3.2 million in dark money support from AzFEC and that second dark-money group, Save Our Future Now.

Stump has said there's nothing to see here, that his calls to Lockwood were unrelated to Forese and Little's campaign and that Mussi is an old friend. It seems Stump was merely trying to coordinate a trip to the symphony when he called Mussi 46 times during the campaign season.

Meanwhile, the commission has said there's nothing to see here because Stump also sent texts to rooftop solar executives.

Of course, whenever a public official says there's nothing to see, it behooves those who are doing the looking to dig a little deeper. So the folks at Checks and Balances, skeptics that they are, have demanded that the Corporation Commission turn over Stump's text messages or, in the alternative, to secure Stump's phone so that commission staff can try to retrieve the deleted messages.

Now the commission has informed Checks and Balances that Stump routinely deleted all of his text messages and then deleted the phone, by disposing of it.

According to the Arizona Capitol Times, the commission's attorney, David Cantelme, sent a letter to Checks and Balances, informing the non-profit that Stump deleted commission-related texts from his phone "consistent with Arizona law and applicable document-retention protocols."

I'm not sure how Cantelme can say that Stump was OK to delete those messages, given that the lawyer admits that he never actually saw what was in those messages.

As for deleting the phone, Cantelme told the Arizona Capitol Times the phone "had passed into obsolescence."

So, too, apparently has the idea of a Corporation Commission that actually regulates utilities.